Federal Communications Commission DA 00-1917
Before the
Federal Communications Commission
Washington, D.C. 20554
)
In the Matter of )
)
Bell Atlantic )
Petition for Limited Modification of LATA )
Boundary to Provide Expanded Local ) File No. NSD-L-99-84
Calling Service (ELCS) )
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Adopted: August 29, 2000 Released: August 31, 2000
By the Chief, Network Services Division:
I. INTRODUCTION
1. On October 25, 1999, Bell Atlantic-Pennsylvania (Bell Atlantic-PA), pursuant to Section 3(25) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended,1 filed a petition requesting that the Commission exercise its authority to modify local access and transport area (LATA) boundaries to permit Bell Atlantic-PA to carry traffic originating with Frontier Communications (Frontier) across LATA boundaries and terminate it in Bell Atlantic-PA exchanges.2 If this request is approved, Frontier customers will have one-way, flat-rated expanded local calling service (ELCS). 3 The petition was placed on public notice,4 and one comment was filed.5 No reply comments were filed.
For the reasons stated below, we grant Bell Atlantic’s request.
II. BACKGROUND
2. Requests for new ELCS routes are generally initiated by local subscribers. IntraLATA ELCS routes can be ordered by the state commission.6 For interLATA routes, prior to
the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (1996 Act),7 the Bell Operating Companies (BOCs) were required to secure state approval and then obtain a waiver from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (District Court).8 In the years between the Consent Decree9 and the 1996 Act, the District Court received more than a hundred requests for Consent Decree waivers to permit new interLATA ELCS routes.10 Because of the large number of requests involved and because most of the requests were non-controversial, the District Court developed a streamlined process for handling such requests.11
3. Under the streamlined process developed by the District Court, the BOC submitted its waiver request to the Department of Justice (Department). The Department reviewed the request and then submitted the request, along with the Department's recommendation, to the District Court. In evaluating ELCS requests, the Department and the District Court considered the number of customers or access lines involved12 as well as whether a sufficiently strong community of interest between the exchanges justified granting a waiver of the Consent Decree.13 A community of interest could be demonstrated by such evidence as: (1) poll results showing that customers in the affected exchange were willing to pay higher rates to be included in an expanded local calling area;14 (2) usage data demonstrating a high level of calling between the exchanges; and (3) narrative
statements describing how the two exchanges were part of one community and how the lack of
local calling between the exchanges caused problems for community residents.15 In addition, the Department and the District Court gave deference to the state's community of interest finding. The District Court also considered the competitive effects of granting a proposed ELCS waiver.16
4. Matters previously subject to the Consent Decree are now governed by the Act.17 Under section 3(25)(B) of the Act, BOCs may modify LATA boundaries, if such modifications are approved by the Commission.18 On July 15, 1997, the Commission released a decision granting 23 requests for limited boundary modification to permit ELCS.19 Although calls between the ELCS exchanges would now be treated as intraLATA, each ELCS exchange would remain assigned to the same LATA for purposes of classifying all other calls.20 The Commission stated that it would grant requests for such limited modifications only where a petitioning BOC showed that the ELCS was a flat-rated, non-optional service, a significant community of interest existed among the affected exchanges, and grant of the requested waiver would not have any anticompetitive effects.21 The Commission stated further that a carrier would be deemed to have made a prima facie case supporting grant of the proposed modification if the ELCS petition: (1) has been approved by the state commission; (2) proposes only traditional local service (i.e., flat-rated, non-optional ELCS);
(3) indicates that the state commission found a sufficient community of interest to warrant such service; (4) documents this community of interest through such evidence as poll results, usage data,
and descriptions of the communities involved; and (5) involves a limited number of customers or
access lines.22
III. DISCUSSION
This petition arises from a formal complaint filed with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PPUC) alleging inadequacies with regard to the scope of the local calling area associated with several Frontier exchanges. Complainants are Frontier customers who reside in the Genessee, Shinglehouse, and Millport exchanges. The Frontier exchanges are located in Pennsylvania but are part of the Buffalo, New York LATA. Complainants believe that to receive adequate access to community educational, medical, and governmental services their local calling area should include the Coudersport and Ulysses exchanges. Coudersport and Ulysses are Bell Atlantic-PA exchanges and are located in the Altoona, Pennsylvania LATA. In response to the complaint, it was determined that, because neither Frontier nor Bell Atlantic-PA owns or operates any facilities that connect the pertinent exchanges, Frontier, in order to provide ELCS from its exchanges to the Bell Atlantic-PA exchanges, would either have to lease facilities from another carrier or build facilities. Ultimately, a PPUC administrative law judge ordered that Frontier build new facilities to create a route between Frontier’s Shinglehouse office and Bell Atlantic-PA’s Bradford office, which is located in the Altoona LATA, to transport calls from Frontier to Bell Atlantic-PA exchanges.
Subsequent to the initial determination that Frontier would have to build facilities, Frontier and Bell Atlantic-PA reviewed their networks and realized that Frontier’s Shinglehouse and Bell Atlantic-PA’s Bradford offices interconnect with facilities of Bell Atlantic-New York (Bell Atlantic-NY) and can be switched in Olean, New York. This realization obviated the need for the construction of a new interoffice facility and a new settlement was reached. Under the new settlement, Bell Atlantic-PA agreed to bill Frontier for the use of transport facilities to transport traffic from Frontier customers through Bell Atlantic-NY facilities to Bell Atlantic-PA. The settlement also stated that Bell Atlantic-PA would request permission from the Commission to handle the interLATA traffic at issue. The stipulation also stated that AT&T would not oppose such a request to the Commission.
7. In most important respects, this petition is very similar to an earlier LATA order that authorized Bell Atlantic to transport calls that originated with RCN customers in Easton, Pennsylvania, crossed a LATA boundary, and terminated with Bell Atlantic customers in
Phillipsburg, New Jersey (RCN Order).23 In the RCN Order, RCN and Bell Atlantic each had agreed to transport and terminate local traffic originating on the other’s network, but Bell Atlantic questioned whether it had the authority to transport and terminate local calls originated by or terminating to a competitive local exchange carrier (LEC).24 We concluded in the RCN Order that Bell Atlantic would not, merely by transporting RCN traffic, be in violation of the restrictions on BOC provision of interLATA service; and we also concluded that Bell Atlantic’s transportation of interLATA traffic originating with RCN customers is the type of action that encourages competition and, therefore, was what contemplated by the 1996 Act.25
8. Similarly, in the present case, we conclude that, merely by transporting Frontier traffic across a LATA boundary, Bell Atlantic-PA would not violate the prohibitions against BOC provision of interLATA telephone service. We also find that the criteria for a LATA modification are met.26 In concluding that the Frontier customers needed a larger local calling area, the PPUC found a community of interest between the Frontier exchanges and Bell Atlantic exchanges. This community of interest was expressed in terms of calls per access line per customer and in the medical and educational services utilized by Frontier customers.27 Given the small number of access lines and that the direction of service is one-way -- originating with Frontier’s customers -- Bell Atlantic-PA gains no advantage that would lessen its section 271 incentives in Pennsylvania.28
IV. CONCLUSION
9. We conclude that Bell Atlantic-PA may interconnect with Bell Atlantic-NY to transport calls originating from Frontier customers in the Genesee, Shinglehouse, and Millport exchanges and terminating in the Bell Atlantic-PA exchanges of Coudersport and Ulysses.
V. ORDERING CLAUSES
10. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED, pursuant to sections 3(25) and 4(i) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 153(25), 154(i), and authority delegated by Sections 0.91 and 0.291 of the Commission’s rules, 47 C.F.R. §§ 0.91, 0.291, that the request of Bell Atlantic-Pennsylvania to transport Frontier Communications calls across a LATA for the
limited purpose of extending the local calling area of Frontier customers to the specific locations, identified in File No. NSD-L-99-84, IS APPROVED.
11. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that pursuant to section 416(a) of the Act, 47 U.S.C. § 416(a), the Secretary SHALL SERVE a copy of this order upon the petitioner, Bell Atlantic-Pennsylvania.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
L. Charles Keller
Chief, Network Services Division
Common Carrier Bureau
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